But loosing 1 bitcoin in the ocean of a maximum of 21.000.000 coins seems significant to me, so not comparable to gold and jewelry.So only 21000 losses of 1000 coins can happen. That's not much!

But remember that each bitcoins can be divided into 100 million pieces, as needed.

And the more valuable they become, the more careful people will be not to lose them.

AMEN!By the time 1,000,000 coins have been lost, one coin might be worth $1,000,000 People don't tend to lose $1,000,000 worth of anything very often. There will forever be 20 million+ BTC in existence.IMO if things continue to progress well it'll get harder and harder for people to lose coins as there will always be more and more technological innovation happening to prevents this.

It's not exactly the same. Most of my recent topics were made to find an answer for one important question. And I think I got it.

It's impossible to have consensus regarding protocol changes in Bitcoin. It's a win-or-lose game, no anything in between allowed. So next-gen coin should have a protocol that could be adjusted by anyone without breaking the whole system.

The subdivision thing cures this entire problem. Let's say 90% of all BTC are destroyed. Now the value of 0.1BTC is approximately the value that 1 BTC used to be, since there are only that many floating around. Life goes on. We're not in trouble of "running out" until like 99.999% of all BTC are destroyed because then there actually wouldn't be enough to go around.

You said you wanted to "increase emission of new dollar banknotes". This is something that congress already does to you today. If you aren't happy with the current rate of emission, just wait a few minutes and it will be higher.

You said you wanted to "increase emission of new dollar banknotes". This is something that congress already does to you today. If you aren't happy with the current rate of emission, just wait a few minutes and it will be higher.